tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6136924754818658762.post608786328374893211..comments2008-10-07T10:16:32.750-04:00Comments on Allan's English Channel Swim: A shot in the armAllannoreply@blogger.comBlogger4125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6136924754818658762.post-4196891678660959832008-09-21T11:52:00.000-04:002008-09-21T11:52:00.000-04:00Hey Allan i hope you are having fun, but more impo...Hey Allan i hope you are having fun, but more importantly how is Ben?? Tell Ben i miss him and tell onion i said hey<BR/><BR/>from ErinErin Kelleyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15307832792163084229noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6136924754818658762.post-8406481097282748102008-09-13T08:07:00.000-04:002008-09-13T08:07:00.000-04:00I should have been more clear! Poor writing on my...I should have been more clear! Poor writing on my part--but the analogy to washing cars was a reference to your shoulders. Swimming taxes the shoulders just like washing cars does. Remember the movie, "The Karate Kid?" "Wax on, wax off" as was the phrase immortalized by the actor Pat Morita. You had mentioned a cortizone shot for your shoulder--but nonetheless, I should have been more clear.Anonymousnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6136924754818658762.post-49790577447687227692008-09-13T05:57:00.000-04:002008-09-13T05:57:00.000-04:00Thanks anonymous (aka Michael). Haven't heard the...Thanks anonymous (aka Michael). Haven't heard the car washing analogy before. That was interesting. I don't feel like 100 laps is much at all now but I did at one time. Over time you just add a little more until what was once hard is routine. So now my "that was kinda hard" threshold is around 360 laps or 10 miles. And its not so much from the distance but more from the 720 flip turns. It makes me really dizzy and disoriented like I'm in a washing machine. Sometimes I would do a few open turns but I really don't like to because it takes longer. I remember one time on a sunny day in the Darlington YMCA pool I had just finished 10 miles and my stomach did not feel well at all. With the sun flashing in my eyes for 5 hours, the Gu gels I ate that didn't sit well and the flip turns, I "tossed my cookies". Don't worry, I made good use of a cooler I had placed at the end of the pool. But even that experience was good training as it is very likely I will do the same in the Channel. That's just part of distance swimming.Allanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/11163852094389719216noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6136924754818658762.post-54912358433813899732008-09-11T20:15:00.000-04:002008-09-11T20:15:00.000-04:00Let me say this to those of you who wonder what 10...Let me say this to those of you who wonder what 100-laps is like in a 25-yard-length pool. It's very challenging! Personally, I have swum competitively in high school and for a year or so after that with the master's team in Pittsburgh, PA. Really, nothing to brag about, but I know the conditioning of what it takes to be able to pull-off what Alan is speaking of. This is no small potatoes even to train for such an event--let alone the event in itself. <BR/><BR/>It's very difficult to compare running, biking and swimming conditioning seperately. They're all so different really. However, Alan is not a person--from what I can tell--to brag upon such atheleticism and fortitude. I tell you, this is a very big deal. Swimming 100-laps is about the same amount of energy that it would take a normal person to wash his or her family car 8-12-times, non-stop (most likely with wax too). No joke! <BR/><BR/>For instance, I ran/walked three miles today. No big deal, but it was very much a different kind of conditioning than someone might suspect in comparisson to swimming three miles. Just totally different!<BR/><BR/>Regardless, my anchor, my prayers, my best is behind Alan! He will become the upteenth person to attempt such an accomplishment; and Lord willing the 1600-hundreth person to accomplish such a task!<BR/><BR/>“Far better it is to dare mighty things, than to take rank with those poor timid spirits who know neither victory nor defeat.” Theodore Roosevelt 1899Anonymousnoreply@blogger.com